/Change-log-manager

A simple application made in C# that helps and eases making and organizing your change-logs.

Primary LanguageC#Apache License 2.0Apache-2.0

ChangeLog Manager


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Description

It’s always nice to have a lightweight tool to help you out with your daily-development activities while working on different projects, I found myself stating the changes I make on my projects on different *.txt files, in plain format, it was only a matter of time, till those dozens of files started to stack on each other, making it harder for me to find and/or review them later, I had this tool by my side for quite a while, served its purpose the way I wanted, and here I am sharing it here for anyone who’s interested in either improving it or using it.

Features

The application is still far from perfect, or maybe not?! both in design and functionality, but with suggestions, it can be improved. You can easily create, open or save your changelogs under a *.log file, you can also export the change-log under HTML, plain text, markdown, BBCode, pawn snippets, JSON, XML, YAML, or SQL queries. all of your recent opened change-logs are saved under a file that's automatically created, called “config.cfg”.

  • Export in many formats (BBCode, Markdown, plain text, HTML, Pawn snippets, JSON, XML, YAML, SQL)
  • Template saving.
  • Quick open recent files.
  • Quick edit/delete/manage/move entries.

Note: upon using this tool, you'll notice a file called config.cfg create, do not delete it unless you want to reset all your recently opened files.

Semantic Versioning

This is not a new or revolutionary idea. In fact, you probably do something close to this already. The problem is that “close” isn’t good enough. Without compliance to some sort of formal specification, version numbers are essentially useless for dependency management. By giving a name and clear definition to the above ideas, it becomes easy to communicate your intentions to the users of your software. Once these intentions are clear, flexible (but not too flexible) dependency specifications can finally be made.

  • Read more on Semantic Versioning here